I
am not sure everyone knows this but we design and maintain our own
websites. For that matter, we pretty much do everything ourselves. The
reason I am mentioning this is because my amazing wife just finished
designing and publishing her own website. All I can say is, “You go
girl, less work for me.” All kidding aside she did a great job you
should go check it out www.lisaromanek.com

Lately
I have been doing a lot of radio shows talking about the hybrid kids.
For those of you that read the books know that these kids in the past
have made an appearance and sometimes in front of a large number of
people. Although we have not seen the kids since 2010 others say they
have, and more witnesses are coming forward. Lucky for us that is what
makes our case so strong. Validating and corroborating witnesses.
Everything that seems to happen does so with people around below are
just a few witness reports regarding the children.

Sadly despite the witnesses and the evidence the debunkers are still hard at work.

From Stan and Lisa

We
had a great time at this year’s IUFOC (International UFO Congress) We
have added pictures of a few of the people we met for the first time,
and pictures of some of our dearest IUFOC friends from years past.

We
wish to send a special hello to Alec Brindell who we spent a lot of
time getting to know this year. It was a lot of fun Alec. I didn't get a
pic of us all together!!!

Remember to go to the websites to get updates of upcoming appearances, radio shows, etc.

Also,
if you want one or both of us to do a conference or an individual
presentation in your area, contact conference organizers, and ask them
to invite us. Stan hates being cooped up at home. Or if you yourself are
putting on an event or just want to organize a talk in your area just
let us know. Go to our contact page at http://www.stanromanek.com/contact.html

Friday, March 29, 2013

Betty Andreasson, who in 1967 experienced an encounter
with UFO beings, became the subject of one of the first controversies
over the claimed contact with extraterrestrials that engaged the whole
community of UFO researchers. In 1979, Raymond Fowler wrote the first of
four books discussing what became known as the "Andreasson Affair."Andreasson's
story began on the evening of January 25, 1967, in South Ashburnham,
Massachusetts. The lights went out in her home, and her seven children
and her parents, who were visiting, gathered in the kitchen. Her father
looked out the back window, attracted by a pink light that was shining,
and he saw several little creatures which he thought of as
Halloween-like entities. He made a passing note of them, but did not do
anything. The next morning, all appeared to be back to normal, except
Andreasson had a strange feeling that something out of the ordinary had
happened. Over the next few weeks she had flashbacks of humanoid
creatures and an otherworldly environment, but it was not until 1977
when she underwent some hypnosis
sessions that the entire story surfaced. It appears that soon after her
father saw the creatures, all of the family was placed in a state of paralysis and several small gray beings entered the house and addressed her telepathically. They took her aboard their spaceship, an action requiring Andreasson to pass through the closed door of her house and to float toward the disc-shaped craft.On
board the ship she was run through a series of tests that included
probes of her body with a needle and the removal of a small object from
her head by a needle inserted into her nostril. She next had a visionary
experience of traveling into another world where she met a being whom
she, a Christian, saw as God. The voice told her that she was a chosen
one. The events aboard the ship closed with a final lecture by an entity
earlier identified as Quazgaa, who told her that she would forget what
had occurred for a while, but that he and his companions loved humanity
and had come to help. Humans needed to study nature to rid themselves of
their self-destructive tendencies. They left her with a book, which she
examined several days later, but again only remembered in 1977.Her
complex story mixed elements of what came to be known as UFO abduction
accounts with contactee themes of a religious-like mission. While UFO
investigators would study abductions intensely through the 1980s, they
avoided contactee accounts (previously denounced as hoaxes or products
of delusion) until a
number of the abductee stories began to add contactee-like content. As
her full story unraveled, Andreasson told of a series of encounters with
the saucer entities that went back to her childhood. Following her
marriage in 1978 to Bob Luca, she settled in Connecticut, where her home
became the scene of a variety of psychic and unusual occurrences. Luca
himself would undergo hypnosis to tell of a similar set of encounters to
those already described by his new bride. New experiences continued
into the 1990s.The Andreasson Affair was integrated into the
whole study of abductions during the 1980s, a study that continues.
Though a number of leading UFO researchers have gone on record as
believing the abduction stories, their work has yet to produce consensus
or what many would see as hard evidence. Final evaluation of the
Andreasson encounters awaits a final resolution of the issue of
abductions. Skeptics have offered variant explanations from lying (the
least credible hypothesis) to subconscious
fantasy. Andreasson has continued to integrate her experiences, which
she sees as evidence of the government of God over the world, into her
Christian beliefs.Book: Go to Amazon.com at this link! http://www.amazon.com/The-Andreasson-Affair-Documented-Investigation/dp/0926524259/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1364608794&sr=8-1&keywords=Betty+Andresson

Colorado prosecutors have rejected movie theater shooting suspect James Holmes' offer of a guilty plea in exchange for life in prison instead of the death penalty.

"While the defense suggested that the defendant be allowed to plead
guilty on his terms, the prosecution indicated that it could not even
consider such an offer without specific additional information, which
the defense refused to provide," prosecutors wrote in their response
Thursday, according to ABC News' Denver affiliate KMGH. Prosecutors also said they believed the defense's offer was a "calculated" move for attention.
"The circumstances surrounding the filing of the Notice indicate that it
was filed for the intended purpose of generating the predictable
pretrial publicity that occurred yesterday," prosecutors wrote, according to KMGH.FULL COVERAGE: Aurora ShootingHolmes' defense attorneys said on Wednesday that he was willing to plead guilty and spend the rest of his life in prison in order to avoid the death penalty. "Prior to arraignment, Mr. Holmes made an offer to the prosecution to
resolve this case by pleading guilty and spending the rest of his life
in prison, without any opportunity for parole," Holmes' attorneys wrote
in an Arapahoe County court filing."It appears the only impediment to a resolution of this case would be if
the prosecution chooses to seek the death penalty," defense attorneys
wrote.Denver defense attorney and former prosecutor Karen Steinhauser, who is not involved in the Holmes case, does not believe the defense's plea offer was a plot for publicity."I don't believe that this was a publicity stunt," Steinhauser told ABC
News. "The goal of the defense is to do whatever they can to save their
client's life.""In Colorado,
the death penalty is still the law and prosecutors have been reserving
it for the worst of the worst," she said. "Most people would agree that
if you're going to have a death penalty, this case represents the worst
of the worst."The Arapahoe County District Attorney's Office declined to comment on the case, citing a gag order.
Holmes is accused of killing 12 people and wounding at least 58 when
gunfire erupted in an Aurora, Colo., theater last July during a midnight
screening of "The Dark Knight Rises."Holmes' physical appearance has evolved over his time in prison, visible
only in rare court appearances. He has gone from wild, Joker-like
orange and red hair in his first appearance to his most recent look of
brown hair and a shaggy beard. He has sometimes looked bug-eyed and
confused and other times so despondent and drowsy that people questioned
whether he had been drugged.District Attorney George Brauchler has gone on the record in the
courtroom that he would have a decision on whether to seek the death
penalty at a hearing Monday, April 1st. He has been meeting with
families of the victims in the shooting to hear their opinions on the
issue.Family members are divided on whether Holmes should get death, according
to investigative sources. Some are philosophically opposed to the death
penalty, others support it and still another group wants death for
Holmes, but they don't want to endure a trial.The next hearing in the case is set for April 1 and his trial is scheduled to begin Aug. 5.